Step inside, we’ve been expecting you! At long-last, Arrow Video is proud to present the complete House saga, brought together on Blu-ray for the first time!

In the original House, William Katt (Carrie) stars as Roger Cobb, a horror novelist struggling to pen his next bestseller. When he inherits his great aunt’s creaky old mansion, Roger decides that he might just have found the ideal place in which to get some writing done. Unfortunately, the house’s vindictive supernatural residents have other ideas…

House II: The Second Story sees young Jesse (Arye Gross) moving into an old family mansion where his parents were mysteriously murdered years before. Plans for turning the place into a party pad are soon thwarted by the appearance of Jesse’s mummified Great Grandpa, his mystical crystal skull and the zombified cowboy who’ll stop at nothing to lay his hands on it!

In House 3 (released domestically as The Horror Show) Lance Henriksen (Aliens) stars as a detective who sends a sadistic serial killer to the electric chair, only to find himself stalked by the maniac from beyond the grave. Meanwhile, House IV: The Repossession has William Katt returning to the fold for one last terrifying tale mixing seedy mobsters, Native American spirits and a singing pizza in perhaps the barmiest House entry of all!

From the team that brought you Friday the 13th, the House films remain era-defining horror classics – now newly restored and loaded with brand new extras!

LIMITED EDITION CONTENTS:

Brand new 2K restorations of all four filmsHigh Definition Blu-ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentationsOptional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearingThe House Companion – limited edition 156-page book featuring new writing on the entire House franchise by researcher Simon Barber, alongside a wealth of archive material

I find it pretty funny that Arrow seemingly could not get the rights to three and four in the US. Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a long shot that standalone releases of the latter two films could possibly do better for whoever else has the rights than loaning them out to Arrow would.

I wouldn't surprised if the texts originally planned simply turned out to be much shorted than expected. It might not be a bad thing to reduce it altogether rather than having a book containing 80% of pictures.

I'm a sucker for nice books. But I have to say I would not understand how the two books could be exactly the same if the US edition does not include the fourth instalment of the series. You would think it would at least have a few words on the movie that is not part of the US edition.

I am hoping they keep the original 156-page book. Is it official that the two will be the same, or just rumours?

I wouldn't surprised if the texts originally planned simply turned out to be much shorted than expected. It might not be a bad thing to reduce it altogether rather than having a book containing 80% of pictures.

The House manuscript that I copy-edited was around 26,000 words, and wasn't complete.

And yet, at least the first 3 movies look very centered in motion, baring a couple of mistakes being revealed. It is nowhere, absolutely nowhere as bad as Hellraiser 3, though it sure raises questions about why the Arrow Lakeshore titles are having these framing discussions almost systematically.

And yet, at least the first 3 movies look very centered in motion, baring a couple of mistakes being revealed. It is nowhere, absolutely nowhere as bad as Hellraiser 3, though it sure raises questions about why the Arrow Lakeshore titles are having these framing discussions almost systematically.

I don't know, framing being off that much is already bad enough, "framing so bad you can see props and crew members" qualifies as unacceptable to me and warrants a recall and replacement, and so should've Hellraiser 3, for that matter.